The United States will be listed on October 24th a new new model will be listed on October 24The 25 -dollar coin, the character image above is Hollywood Chinese actor Anna May Wong, and she became the first Asian to board the US currency.It is worth mentioning that this year is exactly the 100th anniversary of her first starring in the film.

According to the surging news report, Huang Liushuang was born in Los Angeles in 1905. At the age of 14, he appeared on the screen at the age of 14, and then gradually made a sky in Hollywood in the era of the silent film.In 1922, the 17 -year -old Huang Liushuang became the heroine in The Toll of the Sea.

Since then, she has cooperated with many famous Hollywood actors to shoot the best works such as the bustling Shanghai Express of the Yuegong Boxing Chinatown.

Although Huang Liushuang grew up in the United States, she has deep feelings for her homeland.After the outbreak of the War of Resistance Against Japan, she auctioned her jewelry and sent money back to China for support. She also called on the United States to call on the United States to call for work to help China fight against the war.

In 1960, Huang Liushuang, who had faded out of the screen, had its own star on the Hollywood Star Avenue.The next year, she died of illness at the age of 56.

After entering the new millennium, the value of Huang Liushuang was re -recognized. New character biography and documentary were released one after another. The designer reappeared her shape on the runway. The new generation of Hollywood Chinese actors such as Jiama ·Chen and others were also happy to pay tribute to her in public.

The upcoming 25 cents coin re -engraved Huang Liushuang's iconic bangs, fine eyebrows and slender fingers.It belongs to a part of the "Outstanding American Women's Rinning Plan" in the U.S. coinage bureau, and four other 25 cents coins with an outstanding female image as a blueprint are also issued this year.Sally Ride, the United States, Wilma Mankiller, a female chief of the Indian Aboriginal Coconia, and Nina Otero-Warren, a Spanish woman voting activist and educator.